Chicago Sun-Times

2 shot dead in parking dispute; teen witness dies of asthma attack

- BY MITCH DUDEK Staff Reporter Email: mdudek@suntimes.com Twitter: @mitchdudek

Three people wound up dead early Thursday after gunfire erupted following a dispute over a curbside parking spot in the Back of the Yards neighborho­od.

Two women were holding a parking spot for a friend, who was circling the block, when a man pulled up and opened fire after a brief confrontat­ion over the spot, Wesley Williams said. His daughter, Jessica Williams, 16, suffered a fatal asthma attack as she ran for cover.

“She had to have been so scared and frightened to go into an asthma attack like that. She had to been,” Williams said Thursday outside his home in the West Pullman neighborho­od. “And now she’s gone. I don’t have my baby no more. At 2:05 this morning, they pronounced her dead. My baby is gone. My baby is gone.”

The shooting occurred several minutes past midnight in the 800 block of West 50th Place in the midst of a block party attended by about 100 people. They were celebratin­g the life of Jessica Williams’ cousin, Shondell Williams. Relatives said he was mixed up in gangs when he was shot to death three years ago on the same block.

Denzel M. Childs, 25, was shot in the neck, head and chest. Kayana Q. Armond, 34, was shot in the neck. Both were pronounced dead within an hour of the shooting.

A 21-year-old woman suffered a gunshot wound in her left hand and was taken to St. Bernard Hospital. And a 25-year-old woman was taken to Stroger Hospital with gunshot wounds in her back.

Chicago Police Department spokesman Anthony Guglielmi confirmed the shooting originated over a disputed parking spot.

Family members said a second gunman emerged from the party and opened fire on the first gunman. Guglielmi confirmed the second gunman as well, but he said detectives were still sorting out exactly how the rest of the scene unfolded.

Jessica Williams, the second oldest of six siblings, was headed into her sophomore year at Chicago Vocational High School. Asthma ran in her family.

“Jessica always carried her inhaler in her bag,” said her older brother, Anthony, who was not at the party and was at a loss to explain what happened.

“It’s crazy,” said Jessica’s uncle, David Ford, as he shook his head. “A parking space. There’s just so much killing going on. For what? These people just don’t value life.”

On Thursday afternoon, flies buzzed around a mess of blood left on a curb at the crime scene until it began to rain hard.

When the shooting broke out, Earnest Falkner, a retired forklift driver who lives on the block, was asleep in the back of his home.

Two bullets came through his front window. One shattered his 50-gallon fish tank, sending his crappie to the floor.

“It’s messed up out here,” said Falkner, 67, who had been trading phone calls all morning with prospectiv­e landlords in an effort to move to a safer neighborho­od.

“I could have been sitting there on the couch,” said Falkner, pointing to the bullet hole in his window. “She usually sits on top of the couch too and looks out the window,” he said, pointing to his dog, Peaches.

 ?? | SUPPLIED PHOTO ?? Jessica Williams, 16, died from an asthma attack early Thursday after witnessing a shooting that killed two others.
| SUPPLIED PHOTO Jessica Williams, 16, died from an asthma attack early Thursday after witnessing a shooting that killed two others.

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